Written by Rory
Based on some situations originated by James Cameron.
My hand is lonely for your
clasping, dear;
My ear is tired waiting for your call.
I want your strength to help, your laugh to cheer;
Heart, soul, and senses need you, one and all.
--Henry Alford
If there were such a thing as
Saint Nicholas, and were I of an age to still write one, the only thing on my
Yuletide list this year would be to have Jack Dawson alive and here with me,
like he was meant to be. Having him by my side, especially on a day like this
one, would be the biggest gift, the greatest absolution.
You know, this is my first real
night in my new apartment. It’s not much, by any standards. A single yawning
room, one miniscule kitchen and one closet-sized washroom. Paying rent has been
a struggle, and the little furniture I own is threadbare. But I’ve never been more
grateful to be somewhere in my entire life.
And I’ve been many places.
Looking down into the street from
the only window I have, I can see families from all walks of life walking in
and out of the diner I live over and work in. Husbands and wives are walking
hand-in-hand; children are smiling. To me, they look perfect, like everything
is right within the world. They’re everything I’m longing to have myself.
A faint whimpering comes from
behind me, and with one last languishing look towards something that had once
briefly been within my reach, I turn away. I stride over the creaky, bare
wooden floor and past the tattered chaise I sleep on to the wicker bassinet
that rests in a corner near the coal-run fireplace I‘ve yet to use.
The white bassinet is the nicest
thing I own these days. And that is only thanks to the wonderful nurses, now
like family, from the hospital I have been all but living in for the past few
months. It was a homecoming gift for my little girl. Today is her first time
home, and our first Christmas together.
I gingerly lift her from her
blankets and lower myself into the chair I keep beside the bassinet. I unbutton
the top of my dress and guide her rosebud lips to my breast. The song I hum to
her comes naturally. It’s my small way of keeping Jack a part of our lives. I
swear I can almost feel his presence whenever I do.
Clara Ruth Dawson. Her name is
made from memories. For a little girl who never had a chance to live, for a
mother I can’t help but sometimes yearn for, and for a man I never should have
known but would love ‘til the end of existence.
Being able to hold Clara like
this is surreal. I have been told more times than I can count that I never
would. Her every breath since she’s been born has been my own. If she had just
simply forgotten to breathe one day, like the doctors had said she would, so
would have I. The percentage of premature infants that survive are not great.
These past months I have spent in tumult, while my too-tiny baby’s life has
hung by a thin thread, would not have happened if I had given more regard to my
pregnancy. I will never forgive myself.
Being a mother is equal parts
mystifying and wonderful. I’m still comprehending the fact that it’s no longer
just myself I have to consider when I make decisions about what to do with my
life. From now on, it’s the two of us. The love I feel for her, I‘m sure, is
the purest thing any human being has ever experienced.
I was so lost, at first, when it
came to knowing how to care for a baby. I’ve always assumed that the knowledge
of how to soothe and diaper and feed came automatically when you gave birth.
You’ve no idea how inadequate I felt when I didn’t know a diaper from a burping
rag. I had never been taught anything about childrearing. Women of my class get
nannies when they have children. Thankfully, the nurses all assured me it takes
every first-time mother a while to get her sorts about her. And slowly, I’ve
learned. Now, I cannot remember knowing anything else.
Caring for a baby on your own,
when you’ve barely learned how to care for yourself, is hard enough . But
caring for a baby that needs special attention, like constant body heat
maintenance, is nearly impossible. I don’t remember a time when I have felt
anything but tired, either.
While Clara feeds, I stare up at
the Christmas tree, more a branch, that I’ve placed on my small dining table.
It’s nothing like the trees I’ve had in the past, with candles and ribbons and
glass balls. The only ornament that adorns this tree are two entwined
turtledoves in place of the traditional star. A customer I spend my breaks
chatting with sculpted it for me. The weight of the hard-as-porcelain clay
makes the top of the tree incline slightly to the right.
Two turtledoves are a symbol of
love. My daughter and I may not have very much this Christmas, but we do have
plenty of love. And if I’ve learned anything from the recent events in my life,
it’s how important love is above anything else.
Even if one day my dreams of
being an actress are fulfilled and I can afford the finer things again, I
believe I’m still going to use these turtledoves instead of some fancy
Christmas star. That way every Christmas I can be reminded of how much love
I’ve had in my life, and how much I always will. And so I can teach Clara the
same lesson.
Tonight will be yet another night
where I ache for Jack’s voice and touch and the strength that saved me, but as
I close my eyes and listen to the carolers performing for the diners below,
this Christmas night is the also the first glimmer of peace I’ve felt since the
ship sank.
The End.